The exhibitions will include ikats from the Guido Goldman collection at both the Textile Museum and the Smithsonian Institution’s Sackler Museum, other Central Asian carpets and textiles, costumes of Chinese minorities and diverse rugs and textiles from other weaving cultures.

Events begin on Thursday 7 June with tours of exhibitions and local textile storage and conservation facilities, followed by an evening reception at the Dealers’ Fair.

Academic sessions on Friday and Saturday will include sessions on Central Asian rugs and textiles as well as modern trends in carpet and textile scholarship, new attributions, carpet discoveries and recoveries and carpet and textile collecting and museums.

There will be a show and tell session of collectors’ pieces on Sunday, followed by a post-conference tour. The International Dealers’ Fair will remain open from Thursday afternoon through Sunday afternoon. Favorable rates have been arranged for registrants at the prestigious Hamilton Hotel in Washington.

Books from ICOC

Past ICOC Events

ICOC worked with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan and other agencies to produce the 5th International Symposium on Azerbaijani Carpets in Baku, Azerbaijan on the Caspian Sea from October 17-20, 2017. The Symposium lectures were accompanied by various exhibitions at the Carpet Museum and the Azerbaijan National Museum of Art where an important embroidery exhibition with international loans opened on October 17, 2017. In addition, there were special and fascinating tours of Azerbaijan and Georgia.

13th ICOC in Washington DC is a big success

The 13th International Conference on Oriental Carpets (ICOC) was held in Washington DC from 6 – 9 August 2015. This edition was scheduled especially to collaborate with and support The Textile Museum’s new location on the campus of George Washington University.

Participants turned out in larger numbers than anticipated and they were treated to many special events. The menu was quite varied and included the important opening exhibition that filled the new museum. Also, three additional exhibitions from private collections, two receptions, two-and-a-half days of lectures, panel discussions and programs (including a Mystery Rug sessions and a show and tell) were on the program. Additionally, access to The Textile Museum's new conservation and storage facilities and a post-Conference tour to Philadelphia and New York City were heavily attended.

Academic sessions featured international speakers and authorities on new trends in carpet studies, trends in carpet and textile collecting, development in the museum world, the role of the internet and social media in carpet studies and collecting, carpets and contemporary art, as well as various papers on the results of research on specific carpet and textile topics.

ICOC arranged an exclusive conference rate of $109/night (plus taxes) at the one-year old Hilton Garden Inn, only a 10-minute walk to The Textile Museum.

In addition to the all-encompassing exhibition, “Unraveling Identities” at The Textile Museum, the International Hajji Baba Society mounted an expansive and eclectic exhibition of high-quality rugs and textiles belonging to its members. Virtually every major weaving area was represented to show what Washington area collectors have been acquiring in recent years.

The second exhibition displayed 21 diverse "cushions" from Scandinavia to Central Asia. Included were Turkish yastiks, Belouch balishts and Swedish carriage or seat cushions, in addition to a few extremely rare cushions that were not previously seen outside this exhibition. All were from the 18th and 19th centuries.

In this first known exhibition exclusively of cushions (stuffed textiles that were woven to be leaned against or sat upon as opposed to being storage containers such as bags), participants saw a variety of structures, techniques and color palettes spanning thousands of miles. In some cases, these cushions shared design motifs while retaining their own unique regional identities.

The third exhibition focused on 12 highly collectible niche rugs and textiles from Turkey, Persia and Central Asia. Sometimes referred to as "prayer rugs," these niche format pieces were variously made of knotted pile, flatwoven kilim, embroidered silk and other weaving techniques.

Wendel Swan, Chair

Vienna/Budapest

15 – 21 September 2014

ICOC conducted a 6 night tour of important carpets, sights, lectures and exhibitions in Vienna
and Budapest in 2014 from September 15 through September 21.

In Vienna, the program included special exhibitions and visits with lectures to major museums
(the newly remodeled carpets section at the MAK, the Natural History Museum, and others).

The tour in Budapest also included visits to and lectures at the Museum of Applied Art and at
Esztergom.

Stockholm

16 – 19 June 2011

Post-conference tour to St. Petersburg 20–23 June 2011;
pre-conference tour to Copenhagen 14-15 June 2011